Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Biking through Quebec

Sunsets, wild blueberrie­s and coastal vistas beckon travelers to Route Verte

- By Calvin Woodward Associated Press

MONTREAL — In Montreal each spring, an epic bicycle festival demonstrat­es how 25,000 people can let the good times roll without bumping into each other too much.

In Quebec City and its hinterland­s, cyclists plunge into a history shaped by French explorers, the Roman Catholic Church, aboriginal culture and British conquest.

In Charlevoix, an island provides a perfect loop for lovers of quiet roads and eye-candy vistas of mountains you don’t have to climb.

Then there is the south shore of the St. Lawrence, where the panorama of river, sea, sky and flowers defines the magic of bicycling in Quebec in ways that words cannot.

Those treats are mostly thanks to Route Verte, Quebec’s gift to the cycling world. It’s a vast network of trails and bike-friendly byways that is about to get another growth spurt. Quebec’s green way stitches together wild places, pristine villages and a few buzzy cities in a rich, French-flavored tableau.

It’s the masterwork of Velo Quebec, the bicycling associatio­n and Route Verte’s steward.

Sprawling over 3,300 miles, Route Verte is a handful to get to know, requiring more time than most people have. And the network will be undergoing its largest expansion in a decade with about 560 more miles.

Here are some of the great tours: more, seeing the river widen going eastward into the wild beauty of the Gaspe Peninsula until the far shore disappears and the sea, somewhere, begins.

My hotspot is a day ride from the river road at Notre-Dame-du-Portage to Kamouraska and back, about 43 miles in all. In this wide panorama, the sky seems always etched with drama, as stormy sheets of rain and shafts of sun sweep over the mountains on the other side, the river churns in hues of brown and blue, and mist half swallows islands. The Kamouraska canola fields make for a brilliant yellow carpet and village homes — a kind of folk art in themselves— are lined with gardens. Sunsets are routinely extraordin­ary.

In the mountainou­s Charlevoix region, cycling tours are for huffing-puffing people but there’s an exception: a jewel of an island 15 minutes by car from Baie-SaintPaul, an art and tourist hub. Isle-aux-Coudres is reached by a free car ferry. The road hugging the shore is about 16 miles, and the scenery is stunning.

A web of bike trails and designated cycling routes connects cities, farmlands, vineyards and towns in the verdant Eastern Townships. Among the trails, Estriade goes for 60 miles off-road, mostly paved and bordered by dozens of sculptures by internatio­nal artists along a section.

The townships are a region of lakes, Victorian homes, orchards, covered bridges and resorts, maintainin­g a patina of England over a decidedly FrenchCana­dian culture.

Full planning resources for cyclists at routeverte.com and check tourism sites for the regions you’re visiting via quebecorig­inal.com

 ?? CAL WOODWARD/AP ?? Cyclists on Velo Quebec’s Grand Tour 2015 sweep along a trail in the Eastern Townships.
CAL WOODWARD/AP Cyclists on Velo Quebec’s Grand Tour 2015 sweep along a trail in the Eastern Townships.

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